Three Little Peas
By (Author) Marine Rivoal
Enchanted Lion Books
Enchanted Lion Books
4th September 2014
United States
Children
Fiction
Childrens / Teenage fiction and true stories
Childrens / Teenage social topics: Environment, sustainability and green issues
Hardback
48
Width 256mm, Height 210mm, Spine 12mm
300g
Adventure into the garden, with its beauty and danger, as two peas discover the world and their place in it. The story of Three Little Peas is playful and surprising and provides a tender description of life itself. From discovery to discovery, our pea protagonists wonder at the world and brave its dangers, until they end up just where they need to be. And thenbeautifully, inevitablya new pea escapes, and this little pea makes three!
After receiving her baccalaurat, Marine Rivoal went to art school, where she threw herself into learning everything she could about the art and craft of bookmaking. In 2008, she received her second degree, this time in graphic arts, from the Estienne Art School. Next, she went to the School of Decorative Arts in Strasbourg, from which she graduated in 2011. There she deepened her skills and knowledge of engraving and began to experiment with different printing techniques. Today, Marine continues her experiments at a collective for printing and engraving on the outskirts of Paris.
Rivoals soft black-and-white etchings (the only color is the green of the peas) render a dreamlike, stylized depiction of vegetation that harkens back to the jungle paintings of fellow French artist Henri Rousseau. This book can only be fully appreciated by lingering on each spread, and the minimal text encourages such close looking. Flora and fauna are detailed with loving care and humor. -- STARRED REVIEW, Kirkus Reviews Newcomer Rivoal, a French printmaker, creates b&w spreads that zoom in on growing plants with documentary immediacy. Blades of grass, radishes, drops of rain, and stalks of asparagus . . . Readers can spend long stretches of time inspecting the garden and identifying the plants and animals. -- Publishers Weekly The story here is simple enough for a toddler to enjoy and they will love going on an adventure along with two charming green peas . . . Stunningly lovely and unique illustrations elevate this simple picture book to something magnificent. Appropriate for ages 2-4. -- Waking Brain Cells
Rivoals soft black-and-white etchings (the only color is the green of the peas) render a dreamlike, stylized depiction of vegetation that harkens back to the jungle paintings of fellow French artist Henri Rousseau. This book can only be fully appreciated by lingering on each spread, and the minimal text encourages such close looking. Flora and fauna are detailed with loving care and humor. -- STARRED REVIEW, Kirkus Reviews Newcomer Rivoal, a French printmaker, creates b&w spreads that zoom in on growing plants with documentary immediacy. Blades of grass, radishes, drops of rain, and stalks of asparagus . . . Readers can spend long stretches of time inspecting the garden and identifying the plants and animals. -- Publishers Weekly The story here is simple enough for a toddler to enjoy and they will love going on an adventure along with two charming green peas . . . Stunningly lovely and unique illustrations elevate this simple picture book to something magnificent. Appropriate for ages 2-4. -- Waking Brain Cells
Born in the French countryside in 1987, Marine Rivoal quickly moved with her family to Paris, where she spent a happy childhood. After receiving her baccalaurat, Marine went to art school, where she threw herself into
learning everything she could about the art and craft of bookmaking. In 2008, she received her second degree,this time in graphic arts, from the Estienne Art School. Next, she went to the School of Decorative Arts in
Strasbourg, from which she graduated in 2011. There she deepened her skills and knowledge of engraving and began to experiment with different printing techniques. In 2012, she published her first bookThree Little Peas
(Trois petits pois in French)with ditions du Rouergue. That same year, she also began a film with Claire Sichez and Xbo Films. Today, Marine continues her experiments and projects at the ETR Balistic Studio, a collective for
printing and engraving on the outskirts of Paris.